In re JOINT EASTERN & SOUTHERN DISTRICT ASBESTOS LITIGATION.
Arlene MAIORANA, Individually and as Administratrix of the
Estate of John Maiorana, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
OWENS-CORNING FIBERGLAS CORP., et al., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 989, Docket 91-9079.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued Feb. 10, 1992.
Decided April 28, 1992.
Steven J. Phillips, New York City (Levy Phillips & Konigsberg, Alani Golanski, of counsel), for plaintiff-appellant.
Thomas J. Callahan, Boston, Mass. (Tucker, Biegel & Speziali, James D. Silbert, New York City, Hinckley & Silbert, of counsel), for defendant-appellee Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp.
Before: FEINBERG and MINER, Circuit Judges, PATTERSON, District Judge.*
FEINBERG, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff Arlene Maiorana, individually and as administratrix of the Estate of John Maiorana, appeals from four orders of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Robert W. Sweet, J., (1) dismissing as time-barred plaintiff's wrongful death claim against defendants-appellees Owens-Corning Fiberglas Corp. (OCF) and United States Mineral Products Company (USMP),
I. Background
Plaintiff is the widow of John Maiorana, who died of colon cancer on June 16, 1983 at the age of forty. Plaintiff claims that her husband's cancer was caused by his exposure to asbestos and asbestos-containing products during his career as a sheetmetal worker, which began in 1969. Defendants-appellees are manufacturers of various products containing asbestos to which Mr. Maiorana was allegedly exposed. Plaintiff filed her complaint on July 28, 1987.
II. Discussion
A. Wrongful Death Claim
Judge Sweet held that plaintiff's wrongful death claim against appellees OCF and USMP was time-barred.
In 1986, New York changed this harsh doctrine and amended its toxic tort law to allow the revival of claims that had been barred because of a lack of timely awareness of the injury. New York Toxic Tort Reform Act of 1986, Ch. 682, § 4, reprinted after CPLR § 214-c (McKinney 1990). This revival statute provided a one-year period during which plaintiffs could bring claims for exposure to toxic substances that were previously time-barred. Id. However, the statute contained an exception that excluded "any action for damages for a wrongful act, neglect or default causing a decedent's death which was not barred as of the date of the decedent's death and could have been brought pursuant to [EPTL] Section 5-4.1," referred to above. Id. Plaintiff-appellant contends that her wrongful death claim was revived by the revival statute. Judge Sweet found that plaintiff's claim was excluded from the revival statute because the claim was not barred as of the date of her husband's death and could have been brought pursuant to EPTL § 5-4.1.
In responding to interrogatories, plaintiff stated that her husband had been employed as a sheetmetal worker during the years 1969-76 and 1981-83 and had worked in the presence of asbestos and asbestos dust in those jobs. Accordingly, Mr. Maiorana was last exposed to asbestos in 1983, which was within three years of his death in June of that year. Under EPTL § 5-4.1, plaintiff had two years from the date of her husband's death to bring a wrongful death claim. Thus, defendants-appellees argue, as of the date of her husband's death plaintiff-appellant's claim was not time-barred and she could have timely brought a claim under EPTL § 5-4.1. Appellees contend that Judge Sweet was therefore correct in ruling that plaintiff's claim fit within the exception to the revival statute.
Following appellees' motion to dismiss plaintiff's wrongful death claim as time-barred, plaintiff sought to amend her interrogatory answers. She deleted asbestos from the list of materials that her husband had worked with during the years 1981-83 and stated that she had no knowledge of any toxic substances with which her husband had worked during those years. Judge Sweet rejected plaintiff's attempt to amend the original interrogatory answers.
Plaintiff-appellant contends in this court that her original interrogatory answers should not be treated as an admission and that even an admission can be amended. This may be so, but nevertheless we hold that Judge Sweet did not abuse his discretion in refusing to allow appellant to amend her interrogatory answers. Judge Sweet properly took into account appellant's two and a half-year delay in amending the answer, her failure to amend the answer until after appellees' motion to dismiss, and her failure to explain how she no longer had information previously in her possession. Cf. Kulzer v. Pittsburgh-Corning Corp.,
Nevertheless, appellant argues, as she did in the district court, that even if her husband was exposed during the years 1981-83 to asbestos manufactured by some companies, he was not exposed during that time to asbestos manufactured by these particular defendants-appellees. Accordingly, she claims that her husband's last exposure to appellees' asbestos was more than three years prior to his death. Therefore, she contends, at the time of her husband's death she may have had a viable claim against other asbestos manufacturers but her claim against appellees would have been time-barred. Her claims against appellees would thus fit within the revival statute.
Judge Sweet, relying on Monte, held that plaintiff's wrongful death action against appellees accrued only at the last date of her husband's exposure to asbestos. The judge stated that "[a]s this occurred within three years of his death, her wrongful death claim against all of the defendants would have been viable at that time, and thus her entire wrongful death claim is excluded from the scope of the Revival Statute."
On appeal to this court, research has disclosed a New York appellate decision--Catherwood v. American Sterilizer Co.,
We called Catherwood to the attention of the parties and obtained letter briefs addressing its significance. Not unexpectedly, the parties differ sharply over the effect of Catherwood on this litigation. Plaintiff-appellant argues that Catherwood controls here and that since Mr. Maiorana was not exposed to appellees' asbestos products within three years of his death, any claim for wrongful death against appellees was barred at the time of his death. Therefore, plaintiff-appellant argues, the revival statute revived the claim. Defendants-appellees contend that Catherwood does not apply because in asbestos litigation it has generally been a central premise of plaintiffs' theory of liability that there is a causal "nexus" arising from the exposures to all defendants' products and that in arguing the contrary to us plaintiff here is taking inconsistent positions in this litigation.
Since Catherwood was not cited to the district court, the court did not discuss its implications. Moreover, other legal and factual issues remain relating to whether Mr. Maiorana was exposed to appellees' asbestos during the years 1981-83. Because Judge Sweet did not have the opportunity to address the implications of Catherwood and because it is unclear that plaintiff has raised a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Mr. Maiorana was exposed to asbestos manufactured by appellees in the three years prior to his death, we remand appellant's wrongful death claim. On the second issue, it is important to note that although plaintiff stated in her interrogatory answer that her husband was exposed to asbestos in the years 1981-83, she did not specify which companies manufactured that asbestos. Under all of these circumstances, therefore, we believe we should vacate the judgment of the district court on plaintiff's wrongful death claim to allow the court to consider in the first instance the applicability of Catherwood, the factual issue just described and related issues.
B. Loss of Services and Consortium Claim
Judge Sweet granted summary judgment against plaintiff on her loss of services and consortium claim because he found that she failed to provide adequate epidemiological or clinical evidence of causation, an issue on which she would bear the burden of proof at trial.
We find that plaintiff presented enough clinical evidence to survive summary judgment on her loss of services and consortium claim. Plaintiff's two experts on colon cancer testified that Mr. Maiorana's exposure to asbestos was a "significant factor" and "a proximate cause, and a substantial factor" in the development of his colon cancer and death. They based their conclusions on their review of Mr. Maiorana's medical records, occupational and medical history, their knowledge as experts either in occupational medicine or epidemiology and their review of epidemiological studies. They also appropriately based their conclusions on the lack of other factors that could have caused Mr. Maiorana's colon cancer.
We agree with plaintiff that the district court unjustifiably rejected plaintiff's testimony that her husband had no personal or family history of colon cancer because she only testified that "to [her] knowledge" that is the case. We perceive little difference between a statement by Mr. Maiorana's wife that he had no history of colon cancer and a statement that to her knowledge that is the case. Similarly, plaintiff's testimony that her husband's diet was not high in fat was sufficient for purposes of summary judgment to rule out diet as a cause of his cancer. Plaintiff did not need to state that her husband's diet was not high in meat content, as the district court found. We note that a diet high in red meat would have been relevant primarily to a finding that Mr. Maiorana's diet was high in fat. Plaintiff, as the nonmoving party on summary judgment, was entitled to all favorable inferences that may be drawn from the evidence. See Lund's Inc. v. Chemical Bank,
We also reject, for the purposes of summary judgment, Judge Sweet's suggestion that the statements as to causation made by plaintiff's experts were too "ambiguous" and therefore possibly insufficient to satisfy her burden of proof.
It is important to point out that Mr. Maiorana's own medical records and personal history were the clinical evidence upon which plaintiff's expert witnesses based their opinions that asbestos exposure was a significant factor in causing his colon cancer. Plaintiff's experts used epidemiological studies as one basis for an expert opinion but did not rely solely on epidemiological evidence. Thus, plaintiff did not need to provide epidemiological evidence of a certain magnitude in order to defeat a summary judgment motion because she did not rely on epidemiological studies alone. See In re "Agent Orange" Product Liability Litigation,
Finally, we note that the district court's rejection of Mr. Maiorana's personal physician, Dr. Rothman, as an expert seems overly harsh. The district court unduly minimized the expertise of Dr. Rothman, who is a specialist in internal medicine.
The grant of summary judgment to defendants-appellees is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings. Appellees' request for sanctions is of course denied.
